THE BLACK AND WHITE OF STAND YOUR GROUND

America has a long history of enshrining racial disparity in state and national laws, from the openly
race-based policies of slavery and segregation, to the more recent and subtle policies around
profiling, "stop-and-frisk" and the so-called War on Drugs. Several states with especially brutal legacies
of institutionalized racism have reconfigured and enforced their self-defense laws in ways that have
many Americans concerned that these laws may not be as race-neutral as their supporters claim. We
take a look at the historical background and present application of these new Stand Your Ground laws.

DUTY TO RETREAT

English Common Law required that an individual, when threatened, must "retreat to the wall at one's
back" before justifiably killing someone. Only the crown could kill someone and justify it. Everyone else
had to get a pardon from the king if they killed someone. The only way to do that was to prove that
you did everything you could not to kill someone.

"private persons are not to be trusted to take capital revenge one of another."
- Sir Matthew Hale, Jurist

This English Common Law became America's Common Law and is the starting point for all self defense laws to follow.

CASTLE DOCTRINE

Castle Doctrine is another English Common Law adopted in America to remove people from the "duty
to retreat" when attacked in their own home. Every state supports the Castle Doctrine through
legislation, case law, or common law.

"A man's house is his castle -- et domus sua cuique est tutissimum refugium" (and where
shall a man be safe if it be not in his own house?) -Sir Edwar Coke, The Institutes of the Laws of England, 1628.

Everywhere else, one must try to retreat when threatened if it is safe to do so, before committing to
killing someone in self defense.

STAND YOUR GROUND

Stand Your Ground laws are renovations to the Castle Doctrines already found in the states. In fact,
they are often called Castle Doctrine Expansions. They are also called 'Shoot First', 'The Right to
Commit' Murder', 'Line in the Sand', and 'Make My Day' laws.

These are laws that extend the castle doctrine in several different ways:

Location - Nobody has ever had to retreat when threatened in the home. SYG laws remove the 'duty to retreat'
from outside the home as well.

Presumption - Justifiable homicide requires a 'reasonable belief' that a serious threat has been posed, and the threat
must be 'imminent'. SYG laws presume that the surviving party had 'reasonable belief' or that the
threat was 'imminent' or simply that the survivor killed legally in self defense. In other words, it's up to
the non-survivor's party to prove otherwise.

Immunity - Generally speaking, criminal law punishes wrongdoers, and civil law attempts to restore what was
damaged to whoever has been wronged. SYG laws give the survivor immunity from civil law suits and
sometimes criminal law suits and even arrest.

Threat - Some states don't require there to be a 'reasonable belief' that a serious threat has been posed or that
the danger be 'imminent'.

On October 1, 2005, the NRA (former President and current lobbyist, Marion P. Hammer) and Florida
Republicans (Senator Durrell Peadon and Representative Dennis Baxley) drafted a bill that would soon
change the way Americans defend themselves. Jeb Bush signed it into law, and with the help of ALEC
(American Legislative Exchange Council) the NRA introduced similar bills all over the country. The law
did five major things:

Removed duty to retreat

Created a presumption of "reasonable fear of imminent peril of death or great bodily harm"

Expanded the protection of the "castle doctrine" to guests and temporary residences.

Provided immunity from criminal prosecution and civil action.

Established a prohibition against arresting an individual for the use of such force, unless
there is probable cause that the use of force was unlawful.

THE RESULTS

Florida's self defense death rate tripled.

12 "justifiable homicide" deaths a year from 2000-2004.

35 "justifiable homicide" deaths a year from 2005-2010.

On a national scale, the number of justifiable homicides has increased from 176 in 2000 to 196 in 2005
to 326 in 2010.

Firearms were used in 80% of justifiable cases and 65% of non-justifiable cases.

When most of the states that support Stand Your Ground laws are the same as the above states, it's no wonder many Americans are concerned about the black and white of stand your ground.

"Fear, is oftentimes, based on ones own bias, so when you have public policy that, literally
lends itself to people being able to commit crimes or shootings under the color of law,
because they're reasonably afraid, it makes a bad public policy and puts the constitutional
rights of so many people around the country in jeopardy."
-The Reverend Markel Hutchins